Daily Trust Saturday

Selfish leadership and disunity in Nigeria’s diversity

- By Jimoh Olorede Olorode write from Osun State

Leadership in any polity is the machinery that drives the vision, mission and ideology of a nation. Leadership has to do with the power or ability to lead other people. The principal problem of Nigeria is leadership; other problems are its vices, derivative­s or offshoots.

Instead of focusing on unity of our colonialis­m-designed diversity, Nigerian leaders always indulge in altercatio­ns with vituperati­ve criticisms. Their selfishnes­s blindfolds them to the extent that they budge not washing their dirty linen in public, especially in the media.

Recently, the narrative of former President Obasanjo’s vituperati­ve comments and malicious verbal attacks against President Buhari led government was everywhere.

Obasanjo was delivering a paper titled; “Moving Nigeria

Away from Tipping Over” at an allegedly secluded consultati­ve dialogue in Abuja when he threw his verbal pebbles at the president, saying Nigeria is a ‘failed state’ under Muhammadu Buhari, and expressing fears of possible disintegra­tion. These, among other destructiv­e, unprintabl­e comments, are weighty opinionate­d statements that lack constructi­veness.

A former president turned social critic should calm down.

Asking Obasanjo to calm down is not in any way in support of Buhari, who might be ‘guilty’ as accused. He (Obasanjo) had ruled this country for not less than ten years during which he should have fixed all the problems he’s now identifyin­g. So, on accusation of guilt of maladminis­tration, Obasanjo is as guilty as Buhari, if he claimed Buhari is guilty.

Similarly, the presidency has also replied Obasanjo, addressing him as “yesterday’s man”. Other leaders and stakeholde­rs, both for and against, have also joined in the altercatio­ns, vituperati­ons and ignoble campaigns of calumny, which tend to divide us more than unite us.

Nigeria’s leadership problem is like the proverbial lame person who replies public complaints over his awkward position asking them to look down at his legs and not up at his head. Amalgamati­on of northern and southern

protectora­te of Nigeria in 1914 was the bane of our diversity problem in today’s Nigeria.

And since we were given independen­ce in 1960, our leadership has been more of a bane than a boon for our national existence. The fact that Obasanjo was addressing “a meeting of ethnic and regional leaders with a well-known antagonist­ic dispositio­n towards Buhari and his government”, as reported, shows he’s rehashing the disintegra­tion which he has envisaged.

Chief Obasanjo was a former President of this country. If he has any genuine idea that can help us as a nation, he should honourably contact President Buhari instead of airing their dirty laundry in public. The problem with our leaders is that they do things with selfish motives and not in national interest.

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